Cervical Dysplasia

What Causes Cervical Dysplasia?

In order to deal properly with cervical dysplasia we need to understand and — if possible — remove the underlying causes and risk factors.  We need to ask: "What else is going on inside the body that might allow cervical dysplasia to develop?"

Diagnose your symptoms now!
  • let The Analyst™ find what's wrong
  • identify any nutritional deficiencies
  • have a doctor review your case (optional)

Accurate diagnosis of the factors behind cervical dysplasia consists of three steps:

Step 1: List the Possible Causative Factors

Identify all disease conditions, lifestyle choices and environmental risk factors that can lead to cervical dysplasia.  Here are two possibilities:
  • Human Papilloma Virus
  • Cigarette Smoke Damage

Step 2: Build a Symptom Checklist

Identify all possible symptoms and risk factors of each possible cause, and check the ones that apply:
much reduced sense of smell
genital growths
recent heavy tobacco smoking
smoking over a pack a day
secondhand smoke exposure
recently quitting smoking
human papilloma virus
... and so on

Step 3: Rule Out or Confirm each Possible Cause

A differential diagnosis of your symptoms and risk factors finds the likely cause of cervical dysplasia:
Cause Probability Status
Human Papilloma Virus 91% Confirm
Cigarette Smoke Damage 57% Possible
* This is a simple example to illustrate the process

Arriving at a Correct Diagnosis

The Analyst™ is our online diagnosis tool that learns all about you through a straightforward process of multi-level questioning, providing diagnosis at the end.

In the Reproductive Symptoms section of the questionnaire, The Analyst™ will ask the following question about cervical dysplasia:
Cervical Dysplasia. Have irregular, but non-cancerous, cells been found on a Pap Smear? (Class 1 = Slightly abnormal, Class 2 = Abnormal, Class 3 = Severely abnormal. Class 4 would be cancer.)
Possible responses:
→ Not applicable / they were cancerous / don't know
→ Abnormal cells in the past only - class 1 or 2
→ Very abnormal cells in the past only - class 3
→ Current abnormal cells - class 1 or 2
→ Current very abnormal cells - class 3
Based on your response to this question, which may indicate history of cervical dysplasia, history of severe cervical dysplasia, cervical dysplasia or severe cervical dysplasia, The Analyst™ will consider possibilities such as:
Cigarette Smoke Damage

Women who smoke may be 50% more likely than nonsmokers to develop cervical cancer or precancerous lesions.

Concerned or curious about your health?  Try The Analyst™
Symptom Entry
Symptom Entry
Diagnosis
Diagnosis
Suggestions
Suggestions
LifeMeter
LifeMeter®
Full Explanations
Explanations
Optional Doctor Review
Review (optional)
We use cookies for traffic analysis, advertising, and to provide the best user experience